A Vast Array of Beauty: The Accomplishments of the Father of American Ornamental Breeding, Luther Burbank Neil O. Anderson1,3 Department of Horticultural Science, University of Minnesota, 1970 Folwell Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55108 Richard T. Olsen2 U.S. Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Service U.S. National Arboretum, Floral and Nursery Plants Research Unit, 10300 Baltimore Avenue, Beltsville, MD 20705 Additional index words. convenience, exclusivity, flower color, flower power, flower surround, fragrance, intergeneric hybridization, interspecific hybridization, mass breeding, shasta daisy, spineless cacti, sterility Abstract. Luther Burbank (1849–1926) was a prolific ornamental plant breeder, who worked with 91 genera of ornamentals, from Abutilon to Zinnia, and released nearly 1000 cultivars to the industry. His innovative work included both herbaceous and woody plant materials as well as ornamental vegetables such as corn, tomatoes, and spineless cacti. His most popular ornamental release, the shasta daisy hybrids—first released in 1901, is still on the global market. This article focuses on Luther Burbank’s breeding techniques with ornamental plants and how both the germplasms that he developed and his methodologies used permeate modern flower breeding. Genera with the highest number of cultivars bred and released by Burbank include Amaryllis, Hippeastrum, and Crinum followed by Lilium, Hemerocallis, Watsonia, Papaver, Gladiolus, Dahlia, and Rosa. With Lilium, he pioneered breeding the North American native lily species, particularly those from the Pacific coastal region, producing the eponymous Lilium 3burbankii. Burbank’s breeding enterprise was designed to be self- sustaining based on profits from selling the entire product line of a new cultivar or crop only to wholesale firms, who then held exclusives for propagation and selling, although financial hardships necessitated selling retail occasionally. Entire lots of selected seedlings were sold to the highest bidder with Burbank setting the price in his annual catalogs such as the Burbank Hybrid Lilies lot for U.S. $250,000 or some of the ‘‘very handsome, hardy ones’’ for U.S. $250 to U.S. $10,000 each. Other flower cultivars also commanded high prices such as seedling Giant Amaryllis that sold for U.S. $1.55/bulb in 1909. Cacti were another area of emphasis (he released more than 63 cultivars) from the spineless fruiting and forage types (Opuntia ficus-indica, O. tuna, O. vulgaris) to flowering ornamentals such as O. basilaris, Cereus chilensis, and Echinopsis mulleri. Interest in cacti during 1909–15 rivaled the Dutch Tulip mania with exorbitant fees for a single ‘‘slab’’ of a cultivar, speculative investments, controversy with noted cacti specialists (particularly David Griffiths), and lawsuits by The Burbank Company. Although most cultivars have been lost, Burbank’s reputation as the Father of American Ornamental Breeding remains admirable from critics and devotees alike. Luther Burbank passionately bred all the work of the ‘‘Plant Wizard of Santa Rosa.’’ methodologies used thereon still permeate commodities of horticultural plants, particu- The Gold Ridge View Experiment Farm was modern flower breeding. Rather than focusing larly ornamentals (herbaceous and woody an efficient, 16- to 18-acre site (Bush, 1982; on every floral product that he bred (Table 1; flowers, trees, shrubs), on his own properties, Hall, 1939) with continuous rotations of new covered quite extensively by Howard, 1945), first at his 4-acre home and nursery in Santa generational hybrids growing in successive a few exemplary ones are used to illustrate the Rosa, CA, but later, and primarily, on his own plots in the fields, coldframes/hot beds, or methodological approaches used by Burbank Research Station known as Luther Burbank’s glasshouses. It was common to find rows of to achieve his world status as the Father of Gold Ridge View Experiment Farm located mature selections of flowers and other orna- American Ornamental Breeding. at 7781 Bodega Avenue, Sebastopol, CA mentals growing alongside plums or apples. (Fig. 1A; Dreyer, 1993; Smith, 2009; Williams, Yearly bonfires in the fall were commonly 1915). Perhaps best known for his work on small used to destroy all unwanted (rogued) breeding BREEDING AND MARKETING METHODOLOGY fruits and vegetables, ornamentals (herbaceous stock and grow-outs. and woody flowers, trees, shrubs) did not escape As a result of his prominence in the Luther had very little formal education, growing circle of horticultural plant breeders, which ended at the age of 19 years as a result Burbank had numerous volunteer plant collec- of his Father’s untimely death in 1868 Received for publication 15 July 2014. Accepted tors across the globe that shipped him enor- (Howard, 1945). Two years later he became for publication 12 Aug. 2014. mous quantities of germplasm as well as direct a Market Gardener, where he attempted his This paper was part of the workshop ‘‘Contribu- access to the USDA Bureau of Plant Industry first crosses with vegetables to create earlier tions of Luther Burbank: Plant Breeding Artist and germplasm introductions by David Fairchild. types (Howard, 1945). This was not success- Legend’’ held 22 July 2013 at the ASHS Confer- This afforded Burbank the opportunity to fo- ful because he used noninbred parents, which ence, Palm Desert, CA, and sponsored by the cus on developing his methodologies of breed- meant that the F1 hybrids did not possess ASHS History of Horticultural Science Working ing, selection, and commercialization of floral Group. hybrid vigor or heterosis. Later, on reading This research has been supported in whole or in products, which singularly have surpassed the Darwin’s ‘‘Variation of Animals and Plants part by the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment efforts of any individual flower breeder to Under Domestication’’ (Darwin, 1868), he Station. the present day. For example, the purchase of learned about backcrossing and breeding for The mention of trade names or commercial prod- many elite breeding lines, germplasm, and multiple generations to obtain segregants with ucts in this article is solely for the purpose of market-ready cultivars after Burbank’s death variation. After immigrating to California in providing specific information and does not imply in 1926 allowed Stark Brothers Nurseries to 1875, he worked for less than 1 year in a nursery recommendations or endorsement by the U.S. De- offer a wide array of ornamental products to (Petaluma, CA) collecting bulbs and open- partment of Agriculture (USDA). The USDA is an the market (Fig. 1C). equal opportunity employer. pollinated (OP) seeds of California wild- 1Professor. The objectives of this article focus on the flowers, which he sold to seedsmen in the 2Research Geneticist. art and science of Luther Burbank’s tech- eastern United States (Howard, 1945). He 3To whom reprint requests should be addressed; niques with ornamental plants and how both started his first nursery in Santa Rosa, CA, in e-mail [email protected]. the germplasm that he developed and his 1877, but soon focused strictly on highly HORTSCIENCE VOL. 50(2) FEBRUARY 2015 161 The business was meant to be a self- sustaining, profitable, and non-conventional nursery selling the entire product line of a new cultivar or crop only to wholesale firms instead of selling as retail (Howard, 1945). Several large firms participated in this endeavor, both nationally (Stark Brothers Nurseries, John Lewis Childs, W.A. Atlee Burpee Co.) and internationally (J.M. Rutland, Victoria, Australia) (Howard, 1945; Smith, 2009). The highest bidder earned exclusive rights as a propagator, distributor, or retailer to sell the products on the market. Speculation and selling to the highest bidder were common occurrences with Luther Burbank’s floral products. Speculation was fueled by Burbank’s own exaggerated claims for his new plant improvements as well as those of the wholesalers who sold his in- troductions to the general public. Through Burbank’s annual catalog, new products were hawked with prices set by Burbank. For example, for his entire line of hybrid lilies (L. ·burbankii), the price was U.S. $250,000 or for individual ‘‘very handsome, hardy ones’’ U.S. $250 to U.S. $10,000 each (Burbank, 1914–15; Howard, 1945). Other flower cultivars also commanded high prices such as the seedling Giant amaryllis that sold for U.S. $1.55/bulb in 1909 (Burbank, 1909). Interest in cacti—particularly spineless ones— during 1909–15, rivaled the Dutch Tulip mania with exorbitant fees for a single ‘‘slab’’ of a cultivar, speculative investments, controversy with noted cacti specialists (particularly David Griffiths; Smith, 2009), and lawsuits by The Burbank Company. Thus, Burbank created the legacy of ‘‘exclusivity’’ in the flower world— still a common factor for all breeder, producer, and distributor companies driving limited sup- ply and increased demand of novelty items (Anderson, 2006; Drew et al., 2010). Because flowers and other ornamental crops are economically classed as nonessen- Fig. 1. Operational views of the Burbank Experiment Station: (A) The Luther Burbank’s Gold Ridge View tial food crops and are risky during economic Experiment Farm, Sebastopol, CA, at the hiatus of Burbank’s breeding endeavors; (B) winnowing and downturns (Drew et al., 2010), many of bagging seed from the season’s collection—large quantities were often open-pollinated; (C) a display Burbank’s products did not sell in any given of the Luther Burbank Experiment Forms of ornamental plants by Stark Brothers’ Nurseries, which year (Howard, 1945). This leftover stock purchased most of the remaining stock after Burbank’s death (Smith, 2009). (seeds or vegetative plant material) had to be held over for another year’s sales, prompt- ing Burbank to continue to sell at the retail valued fruit and flower ‘‘novelties’’ sourced Burbank’s life and for many decades there- level. This practice ended when the Luther from grow-outs of germplasm collected in after. He employed a very small seasonal Burbank Company was founded in 1912 as the wild, ‘‘chance seedlings,’’ exotic imports, staff—by modern standards—(Smith, 2009), a distributor firm, which had exclusivity to all or limited breeding (Howard, 1945).
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